Florida Could Be Even Fatter by 2030

The U.S. annual fat report card was released Tuesday, and according to what it says, Florida will basically be one massive coronary with palm trees come 2030.

According to the report, Florida is on track to hit 58.6 percent in 18 years, which means health-care costs related to fat-people diseases, such as diabetes, stroke and blood-turning-to-gravy disease, will increase accordingly.

So stop eating that mayonnaise straight from the jar with a spoon and listen up!

In this year's state-by-state ranking, Florida weighs in as the 32nd fattest state in the fattest country in the world, with 26.6 percent of the state being obese. The nation's fattest state, Mississippi, waddles in with 34.9 percent of its population being obese. Colorado, the leanest state, is at 20.7 percent.

Florida gained half a percent since last year, and it's totally your fault. You know you shouldn't have had that Cinnabon at the airport on your way to that convention! Now look at you. You can't fit into those pants, and the state rose a percentage point. WAY TO GO, FATTY McNUGGETS.

All fat jokes aside, if Florida continues to eat sausages wrapped in bacon for breakfast by the bucketload, obesity could contribute to 2.3 million new cases of type-2 diabetes.

We could also see 6.1 million new cases of heart disease and stroke, 5.2 million new cases of hypertension, 3.2 million new cases of arthritis, and nearly 870,000 new cases of obesity-related cancer.